The importance of financial news in the modern world

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5 Reasons to have your own credit card

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Browsing all articles tagged with Deduction

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As you figure your taxes this year, you might be looking at the result and thinking that it would be nice if you could deduct just a little bit more from your income. Even though a tax deduction isn’t as valuable as a tax credit, it can still help you by lowering your tax liability and reducing what you owe overall.

Plus, if you are worried about finding yourself in the next tax bracket up, another deduction or two can really help. But it’s too late — the year has ended. Any deductions you take go toward your next tax return, right?

The good news is that you still have a way to make a deduction for the previous year. Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) and Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) allow you to make tax-deductible contributions up until tax day, so you have a chance to boost your deductions if it looks like it will help your cause.

A traditional IRA (contributions to a Roth IRA aren’t tax-deductible) allows you the option to make a “previous year contribution.” The HSA has this option as well. As long as y


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Tags: Deduction, Deduction Open

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Tis the season to be giving, but that doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy a little kick-back from Uncle Sam for your generosity.  The car donation tax deduction is one such kick-back, a well-deserved reward for donating to a worthy cause.  Unfortunate, the car donation tax deduction has become a lot less valuable the past few years no thanks to a 2005 law change.

The 2005 Car Donation Tax Deduction Law

In the olden days, taxpayers were allowed to deduct the full market value of their donated vehicle.  The IRS, however, felt that a bit too generous.  What ended up happening is that most taxpayers ended up deducting the higher retail price of their vehicle (what a used car dealer would sell the car for, which isn’t the same as fair market value), costing the government millions in lost tax revenue annually.

To plug the leak, Congress enacted new legislation in 2005 which limited the value of the car donation tax deduction to what the charity actually ended up selling  the vehicle for at auction, which is usually nowhere near fair market value.  The charity is obligated to provide you with you with a statement of sale within 30 days of your donation enumerating the actual sale price, which you must attach to your tax return in order to claim the deduction.  The catch, of course, is that you have no way of knowing what your old car will end up selling for, so it’s hard to know whether the tax deduction is worth it or not.

But there is a loophole!  If the charity ends up using your car for its stated purpose (that is, keeping it for their own use instead of selling it), you can deduct your car’s full fair market value.  Unfortunately, only relatively well-maintained late-model used cars will likely qualify for this loophole, because not even a charity would want to drive around in your 1987 Ford Pinto.

Your Options

  1. Donate Your Vehicle Anyway – You’ll be lucky if you car donation tax deduction is more than 25% of what your vehicle is actually worth, but donating your clunker to charity is still a lot less of a hassle than selling it.  It might be worth it to you to take the lower deduction just to get rid of the thing.
  2. Sell Your Car And Donate The Proceeds To Charity – Your donation could easily end up being 3-4 times larger if you go this route, but selling an older car can be a pain.  Still, this is by far the best route to go if you have the fortitude.
  3. Trade In Your Old Car To A Dealer - Trade-in offers are notorious for being insultingly low.  Still, it takes the hassle out of selling a used car.  Unfortunately, the charity doesn’t benefit at all in this scenario.
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Tags: Deduction, Donation Tax, Donation Tax Deduction, Tax Deduction

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